Renewable%20Energy-Biomass - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Renewable%20Energy-Biomass

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Title: Renewable%20Energy-Biomass


1
Renewable Energy-Biomass
  • Paul and Chetta

2
Biomass
  • The term biomass refers to any form of plant or
    animal tissue. In the energy industry, biomass
    refers to wood, straw, biological waste, such as
    manure, and any other nature materials that
    contain stored energy (www.re-energy.ca)

3
Biomass-Energy
  • The energy stored in biomass can be released by
    burning the material directly, or by feeding it
    to micro-organisms that use it to make biogas, a
    form of natural gas.(www.re-energy.ca)

4
Biomass-USA
5
Biomass-Govt
  • Any solid non-hazardous cellulosic waste material
    which is segregated from other waste materials
    and which is delivered from (A) forest-related
    resources, (B) solid waste materials, and (C)
    agricultural sources.

6
Energy Policy
  • Federal Govt. projections of renewable
  • 2005-07 Not less than 3
  • 2008-10 Not less than 5
  • 2011- Not less than 7.5
  • Grants Program Payment will not exceed 20 per
    ton
  • 75M annually for spending on Biomass/Biofuels
  • Projects U. of TN- Switch grass (1M)
  • IO State clean energy gasification from switch
    grass (250K)
  • MI soybean biodiesel (300K)
  • NE soybean oil for biodiesel (500K)

7
Biomass-Biofuels
  • Converting biomass into liquid fuels for
    transportation

8
Biomass-Biopower
  • Burning biomass directly, or converting it into
    fuel or, to generate electricity

9
Biomass-Bioproducts
  • Converting biomass into chemicals for making
    products that are made from petroleum

10
Agricultural Crops
  • Cane, corn, wheat, sorghum and vegetable
    oil-bearing crops
  • Liquid fuel sources
  • either as ethanol or biodiesel
  • Residues- rice husk, sugar cane fiber, coconut
    husks, groundnut shells, straw

11
Ethanol
  • Used to produce Gasohol
  • Made from Corn or Sugar cane
  • Currently used widely in the Midwest and South
  • 10 ethanol and 90 gasoline
  • New technologies are using switch grass and
    willow, more efficient

12
Animal Waste
  • Most common are manures from pigs, chickens and
    cattle (feed lots)
  • Convert waste via anaerobic digestion into biogas

13
Forestry crops
  • Fast-growing and coppicing
  • Residues are generated by thinning , clearing
    for roads, extracting stem wood for pulp and
    timber, sawdust, off-cuts, bark and woodchip

14
Industrial waste
  • Solid waste-peelings from fruits and veggies,
    substandard food, filter sludge's and coffee
    grounds
  • Liquid waste-washing meats, fruits and veggies
    pre-cooking, wine making

15
Municipal waste
  • Millions of ton(s) into landfills
  • Converted into energy by direct combustion or
    anaerobic digestion, with gas collected from the
    stored material
  • Sewage-Biogas production

16
Anaerobic Digestion
  • Decomposition of wet and green biomass thru
    bacterial action w/o oxygen
  • Mixed gas output of methane and carbon dioxide
  • Pipeline distribution
  • Biogas is produced using animal manure
  • Can be burnt directly for cooking or heating or
    used as fuel in combustion engines

17
Methane
18
Benefits
  • Renewable that does not contribute to global
    warming-recycled in next generation of trees
  • Negligible sulphur content
  • Conversion of agricultural, forestry, municipal
    waste reduced landfill
  • The growing of trees and plants remove carbon
    dioxide during photosynthesis and store carbon
  • Fast growing trees recycle carbon rapidly
  • Energy crops provide dual purpose of soil
    protection, drought and habitat

19
Benefits-Economically
  • New technologies to create ethanol from switch
    grass and willow trees
  • Farmers profit
  • Marginal lands can be used
  • Domestic resource
  • Job increase
  • Byproducts can be used as animal feeds,
    fertilizer and soil amendments
  • Local energy for communities
  • Biogas from landfills

20
Problems
  • Biomass has low energy density-transportation
  • Incomplete combustion-localized air pollution
  • Biomass-combustion-pollution
  • Deforestation
  • Conflict of land use for other uses,-farming
  • Not fully competitive
  • Takes energy to make energy
  • Exotics
  • Increased need for pesticides and fertilizers
  • While landfill space is saved, may destroy
    resources that could be recycled or reused
  • Waste products, wood, tires, sewage can contain
    contaminants

21
Problems-Economically
  • Ethanol production is viable with federal tax
    subsidies
  • Growing corn for ethanol has high production
    costs and impacts from fertilizers, pesticides
    and fuels
  • Conversion efficiency low
  • Short term production cost high, cheaper in the
    long-term
  • Biomass is not free-labor, equipment, fuel costs
  • Landfill methane technologies are perceived to
    have high risk (DOE)

22
Biomass Use
  • 3 of primary energy in industrialized countries
  • Developing countries, especially rural areas use
    50 of traditional biomass (wood)

23
Future within Biomass
  • Strategies must be different in different
    geographical areas determined by land quality,
    land uses, competing uses and the areas demands
    for energy.

24
Future
  • Several Indian tribes, BLM and Forest Service
    are developing small biomass energy systems as
    healthy forest initiative
  • Biodiesel is cleaner alternative
  • DOE sponsoring efforts to increase conversion
    efficiencies
  • Gasifier technology being used in HI to produce
    hydrogen from biomass (Bagasse, nutshells, sugar
    cane, switch grass)
  • Direct combustion within boilers to produce
    energy
  • 40 million vehicles run on alcohol in Brazil
  • Monsanto and Shell have teamed to produce
    genetically modified, rapid growing trees
  • Biomass accounts for 1.6 of total US electricity

25
  • Should anything that creates pollution in order
    to create energy be considered green, clean or
    renewable?
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